Table 1.
Step | Diagnosis notes |
---|---|
1. Patient history | Routine questioning should identify the source of the patient’s pain |
Pain is typically discrete and unilateral and displays an itching, burning, sharp, stabbing or throbbing quality | |
Pain is intermittent and chronic in nature | |
Pain is sufficiently intense to interfere with normal daily activities | |
Pain following a documented episode of AHZ provides compelling evidence for a diagnosis of PHN | |
2. Physical examination | Areas of previous AHZ infection may manifest evidence of cutaneous scarring |
Affected area may display either hypersensitivity or hyposensitivity to pain | |
Allodynia may occur in the pain-producing area | |
Autonomic changes may also occur in the affected area, including increased sweating | |
3. Laboratory investigations | PHN diagnosis does not rely on laboratory evaluations |
Viral culture or immunofluorescent staining may be used to distinguish herpes simplex from herpes zoster | |
Presence of antibodies to herpes zoster may help support diagnosis of subclinical herpes zoster infection, especially in the case of zoster sine herpete | |
Other laboratory tests may be useful in confirming a herpes zoster infection, including immunoperoxidase staining, histopathology and the Tzanck smear |
AHZ acute herpes zoster, PHN postherpetic neuralgia